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Lymphoma immunotherapy: vaccines, adoptive cell transfer and immunotransplant
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Lymphoma immunotherapy: vaccines, adoptive cell transfer and immunotransplant IMMUNOTHERAPY Brody, J., Levy, R. 2009; 1 (5): 809-824Abstract
Therapy for non-Hodgkin lymphoma has benefited greatly from basic science and clinical À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ such that chemotherapy and monoclonal antibody therapy have changed some lymphoma subtypes from uniformly lethal to curable, but the majority of lymphoma patients remain incurable. Novel therapies with less toxicity and more specific targeting of tumor cells are needed and immunotherapy is among the most promising of these. Recently completed randomized trials of idiotype vaccines and earlier-phase trials of other vaccine types have shown the ability to induce antitumor T cells and some clinical responses. More recently, trials of adoptive transfer of antitumor T cells have demonstrated techniques to increase the persistence and antitumor effect of these cells. Herein, we discuss lymphoma immunotherapy clinical trial results and what lessons can be taken to improve their effect, including the combination of vaccination and adoptive transfer in an approach we have dubbed 'immunotransplant'.
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